Urban Agglomerations and Employment Transitions in Ethiopia
Agglomeration boosts economic growth. A vast literature has empirically assessed the effects of agglomeration by estimating the city population elasticity on wages. This conventional approach is not necessarily suitable for analyzing urbanization a...
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2020
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/800691584111128907/Urban-Agglomerations-and-Employment-Transitions-in-Ethiopia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33444 |
Summary: | Agglomeration boosts economic growth. A
vast literature has empirically assessed the effects of
agglomeration by estimating the city population elasticity
on wages. This conventional approach is not necessarily
suitable for analyzing urbanization at the early stage in
developing countries, where a majority of urban workers
engage in self-employment and/or informal jobs. Focusing on
one of the poorest and largest among those countries, this
paper sheds light on an aspect of urbanization and
agglomeration: the transition in the mode of labor from
self-employment/informal jobs to wage employment/formal
jobs. Applying the instrumental variable approach to
national labor force survey data sets, the analysis
underscores several labor market transitions across space in
urban Ethiopia. First, the town population size and the
share of workers with wage employment are strongly
correlated. The probability of engaging in wage work
increases by 4.5 percentage points with a log increase in
population size. Second, this relationship is particularly
strong among disadvantaged workers, such as the female,
young, and/or less educated population. Finally, the study
documents higher labor force participation and lower
underemployment in larger towns. |
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